Boise pastor held in Iran won’t be back in Idaho until he gets medical treatment

A Boise pastor who was held in an Iranian prison for more than three years has serious medical issues and may need several days of treatment before he is reunited with his family, his wife told the Statesman Monday.

Never miss a local story.

After he receives medical treatment, he will be flown to a facility on the East Coast.

“The kids and I will meet him there to take time to heal and readjust and work on our marriage,” Naghmeh Abedini said, noting that the family is moving toward a time of much-need privacy. The couple have two children, Rebekka, 9, and Jacob, 7.

Pittenger, an evangelical Christian who began working for Saeed Abedini’s release in September 2013, flew to Germany on Sunday after he learned that Abedini was one of four Americans to be freed as the final pieces of the Iran nuclear deal fell into place. But by Monday night, Pittenger hadn’t seen Abedini, and the congressman was uncertain when they might meet.

“It was a long journey to get him from an Iranian prison to freedom,” Pittenger told McClatchy. “But as is the case with all former hostages, it’s a longer journey back to an old life. Here, he’s taking the first step of another long journey. It’s a very challenging recovery.”

Pittenger said he did not expect to meet with Abedini for another day or two.

He said he received an account that Abedini appears to be in good shape physically, but his mental and emotional state after a long period of brutality is much more complicated, and will take some time to figure out

Pittenger told the media Nagmeh Abedini is expected to arrive in Germany by Wednesday and that he believed she should meet with the pastor before he did, but Nagmeh confirmed to the Statesman Monday night that she does not plan to go to Germany.

He said the military doctors suspect the initial phase of Abedini’s “re-assimilation” will take five to 10 days.

Related stories from Idaho Statesman

Saeed Abedini was released as part of a prisoner swap. The other Americans released were Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati and Nosratollah Khosravi-Roodsari, whose name had not been previously made public, according to the Associated Press. A fifth American detained in Iran, Matthew Trevithick, was released in a move unrelated to the swap, U.S. officials said.

Abedini has been held by Iranian authorities since September of 2012, when he was in his native Iran to build an orphanage. He was sentenced in January of 2013 to serve eight years in prison for Christian proselytizing. He was previously arrested in 2009 and released after promising to stop organizing churches in homes.